Booking records show he’s now in Los Angeles Police Department custody, being held on more than $7 million bail.

Days after the shooting, little else is still known about Holder or his possible motive for allegedly shooting Hussle, whose musical talents and business flair have been heralded this week by celebrities, politicians and many who just knew him as a kid growing up in the Crenshaw district.

“That’s the shocker,” said Rodney Phillips, who operates the famous Woody’s Bar-B-Q less than a block away from the shooting site. “Nobody understands why.”

At around 3:20 p.m. Sunday, Holder walked up to Hussle and spoke to him and the other men he was standing with, police said. After he left, Holder came back with a handgun. He opened fire, striking Hussle several times.

Police said Holder then fled the parking lot in a white Chevy Cruze waiting in a nearby alley.

Holder has not yet been charged, according to officials from the L.A. County District Attorney’s office.

They declined to say when he could be charged with murder, but California law prevents arrested suspects from being held for more than 48 hours without charges.

At LAPD’s downtown headquarters on Tuesday, Chief Michel Moore said the motive for the shooting was “a personal dispute” between Holder and Hussle. But Moore and others declined to give more details on what the dispute was.

A captain for LAPD’s South Bureau homicide detectives repeatedly declined to discuss a motive for the shooting on Tuesday. “When I meet (Holder), I’ll ask him,” Capt. Billy Brockway said.

Some at the memorial site Wednesday were more certain.

“Jealousy, envy,” said Herman Douglas, a longtime friend of Hussle.

Wearing a black T-shirt and a black cowboy hat, a pair of long braids hanging on either side of his head, Douglas has been a constant presence at the strip mall parking lot since the shooting.

He said Holder was another musician from the neighborhood that people knew, someone Hussle and others in his circle could trust.

After more than a decade of selling mix tapes of his music and opening retail stores in the Crenshaw neighborhood where he grew up, Hussle already was famous to Los Angeles fans who celebrated him as a fixture of the local hip hop scene. A Grammy nomination in February for his debut album only added to that fame.

In that time, Hussle became just as well known as someone who gave back to his community — giving free textbooks to students, opening job centers and partnering with local politicians reaching out to Crenshaw residents.

At the Tuesday press conference, L.A. City Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson described Hussle as “a bright light” shining in South L.A.

Police Commission President Steve Soboroff, who was scheduled to meet with Hussle to discuss gang-violence prevention strategies the day after his death, said the rapper was “assassinated.”

People who knew Hussle said it would have been known to anyone targeting him that he often showed up at the strip mall on Sundays.

Hussle opened his flagship clothing store, The Marathon, at that development, and was often seen hanging out there. He also purchased the property outright this year, planning to knock it down to make way for an even bigger, six-story apartment and retail development.

Both Rodney Phillips, the owner of Woody’s Bar-B-Q, and his sister, Tracy, were at the strip mall on Wednesday, along with dozens of others filing in to the parking lot between metal barriers set up by police.

LAPD officers on Slauson Avenue directed visitors in and out of the lot, trying to control how many people were there at a time after a panic on Monday night led to a stampede and multiple injured.

The scene Wednesday afternoon was quiet — loud music played as mourners left candles and balloons at an ever-growing memorial site.

Rodney Phillips said Hussle had a vision for the neighborhood, much like his own father, Woody, the namesake for the barbecue restaurant. The rapper emphasized keeping money in the area’s African-American community, even as real estate development takes off from the nearby Metro station.

Tracy Phillips said both siblings watched Hussle grown up to become a symbol of progress for Crenshaw.

“He tried to bring hope and change to this neighborhood,” Tracy Phillips said. “He’s just going to be missed.”

Joshua Cain is a crime and public safety reporter for the Southern California News Group, based at the L.A. Daily News in Woodland Hills. He has worked for SCNG since 2016, previously as a digital news editor in the San Gabriel Valley, helping cover breaking news, crime and local politics.